Trending Topics
Givot600x530.jpg

David Givot, Esq.

The Legal Guardian

David Givot, Esq., graduated from the UCLA Center for Prehospital Care (formerly DFH) in June 1989 and spent most of the next decade working as a paramedic responding to 911 in Glendale, California, with the (then BLS only) fire department. By the end of 1998, he was traveling around the country working with distressed EMS agencies teaching improved field provider performance through better communication and leadership practices, until he moved into the position of director of operations for the largest ambulance provider in the Maryland.

In 2008, he graduated Law School in Southern California, passed the California Bar on his first attempt and has spent more than a decade building a Criminal & EMS Defense Law Practice. In addition to defending California providers who have found themselves in trouble for [alleged] missteps on the job and off, as an EMS Lawyer, he has continued working toward his goal of improving EMS through education and training across America and as trusted counsel for providers throughout California.

In 2006, David created TheLegalGuardian.com as a resource for EMS providers. He is a nationally sought-after lecturer and proudly teaches the EMS/legal curriculum for his Alma Mater, UCLA Paramedic School.

David is the author of “Sirens, Lights, and Lawyers: The Law & Other Really Important Stuff EMS Providers Never Learned in School.”

David is a member of the EMS1 Editorial Advisory Board. He can be contacted via e-mail at David@thelegalguardian.com. @EMSLawyer on Twitter, @EMSLawyer11 on Instagram, and www.facebook.com/EMSLawyer.

LATEST ARTICLES
Among the countless elements of that higher standard is maintaining, not only the perception, but the reality of objective, unbiased care for all in need
The LAFD SOBER unit for Skid Row’s frequent users is a good idea, but potential dangers to paramedics cannot be ignored
True loyalty is pushing for improvement, rather than accepting substandard patient care from your peers and co-workers
For every action in EMS there are consequences — sometimes positive and sometimes negative — but sometimes you do what you gotta do
EMS providers have a duty to make a good faith effort to provide competent, efficient and compassionate emergency care to everyone and anyone in need
Preservation of evidence and scene documentation can help bring the guilty to justice and also ensure an innocent person is not wrongly convicted
Here’s why locking the ambulance should be a policy for every agency and a habit for every EMS provider, like wearing a seatbelt
Drug, alcohol and other addictions impact every family, including our EMS family; we need to know how to respond to and support an addict
Instead of getting down on lawyers or the profession, let the law protect you from harm while you protect others and redefine professional fun
Paramedics must be afforded the opportunity to exercise a degree of autonomy in situations where the law and righteousness don’t always agree